since Tumblr refuses to upload odt files and i refuse to use Docs to share my texts from now because of the threat of AI stealing my work, here we go.
hi, i'm Silva, my main account is @silvashapeshifter and this is my writing blog. here i'll post my texts. i'd say this blog is 13+ ? i won't post smut here, as i don't want to mix my sfw and nsfw texts. i will post them elsewhere tho, dm if you want the name of the blog (only if you're 18 or above. minors won't be given the blog's name).
i'm more into OC stories than fanfictions of canon characters, and if there's indeed fanfiction of canon characters it'll be almost always in the context of yumeship (oc x canon and/or self ship). though my OCs' stories are often settled into already existing universes such as UTMV and can interact with canon characters.
i will try to tag properly.
please only give advices if those are explicitly asked for. otherwise i'll just assume you're rude af.
tags for texts will be #.txt and/or #silva writes.
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This story was just one rabbit trail of What-Ifs after another, all inspired by the tale of Tam Lin. Thanks, Red.
To Become a Lost Soul
Janet had perhaps seven years to her name when she met them.
It was a brief encounter, but a vivid one, such that she was still processing it when they met the second time. That second time was a visit, a visit from the Fey, and Janet had never in her life been so terrified and awestruck.
Sheâd never seen her father look so frightened either. Graeme was a large man with a solid sturdiness to him that made one think he could shoulder a mountain if he so wished, and though he had a kind soul, it was the type to be hidden from the observer behind a thick beard and stern grey eyes. Needless to say, to see him almost cowering before them was more fear-inspiring to her than the Fey themselves.
How many of them glided into the grand hall of the fort, she did not know, for the Fey leading the procession drew her eyes and the rest blurred into a muddle of sharp smiles and rustic grandeur in a certainly unnatural way. This Fey was their Queen, so her posture and crown proclaimed, and she was ethereal. A tall figure that towered over everyone, long hair that swept the floor, and such narrow beautiful features. The smile would have been friendly if there wasnât so much teeth to it; clearly she felt at home in their wood & stone manor with its richly woven rugs and tapestries, despite her simple flowing robes and bare feet.
Her eyes swept the room once before landing on Janetâs form hiding behind her father, and the smile grew wider. Smiles should not be so terrifying, is what Janet thought to herself while her father placed a protective hand on her head. Smiles should make a person feel nice. Smiles should say theyâre harmless.
The Fey were anything but harmless.
âTo what do we owe the pleasure of your visit?â her fatherâs voice rumbled. He had solidified again somewhat â likely their interest in his daughter had triggered his paternal instincts.
âMy, such a charming young man,â the Fey Queen crooned. Her voice was strange in a way Janet couldnât place, the tone as though she wasnât talking to them, but rather about them. âYou must be her father. It is only right that such a lovely child would have a lovely father. How befitting indeed.â
The full weight of her gaze was once again resting on Janetâs face, and though her knees threatened to give out beneath her, Janet ordered her expression to morph into a properly friendly smile. No teeth, not from her.
That seemed to satisfy, or perhaps delight, the Fey, whose smile grew to truly unnerving lengths as she said, âSuch a sweet-ling! Her presence in my abode to-day was quite the pleasure. She fairly brims with potential. Potential, so much potential indeed⌠it would be such a shame to see it wasted.â
âWasted, fair lady?â The manâs tone was cautious.
âWhy, indeed. Though she possesses charm in abundance, true grace is that of the feyâs; grace that will take her far in the world, grace that I shall bequeath her.â
âThe fair lady is excessively kind in her gifts; my daughter only meant to extend hospitality as she has been taught,â Graeme said, quiet and careful.
At the time Janet couldnât understand it, couldnât understand that her father had just saved her from owing the fae a debt whilst giving the Fey Queen a mild push to retract her offer, without outright denying her. She couldnât imagine the way she would turn that string of words over in her head for years to come, marvelling at the protection it had given her. Just then she only understood that it made the Fey Queen either very angry or very amused; the light that flared in her eyes wouldnât let Janet know which it was.
The Fey Queen tilted her head and gave a little laugh, the sound like the ones the birds made when scared from the bushes. âSuch a family is certainly deserving of gifts periodically. Do you not think it so, Tamlin?â
âYes, Mother.â
That was when she first saw the boy.
He was definitively Fey; the way he flowed forward from the rest of them to stand next to the Queen when she addressed him, the paleness of everything about him (from his eyes to his hair), and the calm lack of expression on his face were distinctly not human. But while he resembled his mother somewhere in his features, he lacked her eerie otherworldliness, instead projecting a serenity and safety that eased Janetâs death grip on her fatherâs cloak.
Their eyes met, and though his mask didnât move (why did she think it was a mask?) she thought she saw some curiosity and⌠fear in his eyes.
Why was he afraid? He was one of them. What was so scary about Janet in comparison?
This puzzled her enough that she would have missed what was said next if it hadnât come from the Queen.
âThere is much Tamlin can learn from the sweet-ling, I am sure, so I will have him present the gift,â she said, placing her hand on his shoulder in a way that would have mirrored Janetâs father if Tamlin hadnât stiffened ever so slightly when she did. âBe a good boy and give it to her, Tamlin.â
The boy-Fey was motionless for a moment, still looking at Janet without a change in his expression. She got the feeling he was hesitating.
âMother, perhaps-â
âYes?â The Queenâs voice had gotten dangerously soft.
âIt is nothing. I will give her the gift.â
He glided forward then, stopping a pace or so away from them, and Janet cautiously stepped forward to meet him, her fatherâs hand sliding off her head without resistance. Perhaps it was Tamlinâs presence that allowed it; perhaps he was the reason she could hope this wasnât all some menacing trick.
The boy-Fey held his hands out and Janet placed her hands there, marvelling at how niveous he was. She glanced at the Queen, who was smiling eerily once more, then at her father, whose eyes gave her support, before looking at Tamlin again. It was then that she saw the apology in his eyes â and the very real fear.
Why is he afraid? she thought again. What could I possibly do?
And then it slowly occurred to her that perhaps she wasnât the one he was afraid of.
Before she could do anything, he closed his eyes and began murmuring a strange chant that was taken up by the other Fey in the room; a chant made of sounds she didnât understand how he could make, one that flowed around Tamlin and herself, and seemed to reach deep inside her heart, looking for something.
She was getting light-headed with the way it was reverberating around the room, ancient and otherworldly and wild. Oddly enough, though Tamlinâs expression was still composed, she could feel his hands shaking too. This did not sit right with her, so she squeezed them with what little energy she could muster, and felt him tighten his hold in response, as if he was asking reassurance and giving some simultaneously.
It found what it was looking for, the chant; found it, and then began to take it, dragging that something away from Janet. Something very important and integral to her, because it hurt and it hurt worse than fire. She would have uttered a cry, or screamed, but the chant had taken her energy without her noticing, and it was so loud, and she could only feel pain, and she couldnât feel anything, and it was so dark, and she didnât exist, and it was too bright, and nothing was real besides the fact that Tamlin was still holding her hands and she was holding his.
He was going through whatever she was going through, she knew without a doubt, so she kept holding on to him until she could blearily blink her eyes open and see that they had both collapsed onto the floor, sweet silence permeating the room.
Itâs over, she thought with a sigh that felt strange. Itâs all over.
Then her eyes closed and darkness overcame her.
------
Later, her father would describe what happened as remarkable. The chant had brought out a light from both Janet and Tamlin, and their lights had flowed through the room, filling it with scents of berries and wild leaves and wet earth and stars, and livening the colours in the air, before it returned to them and everything settled once more. The Fae Queen had smiled down at the sleeping children and swept away without another word, leaving one of her entourage to pry apart their hands and take Tamlinâs unconscious form away.
Graeme had then scooped her up and brought her to her room, where her nurse (and their resident herbalist), Kenna, was summoned. Kenna had checked over her and identified nothing wrong, but the both of them had waited in fretful patience for Janet to wake up, anyway.
This all she heard perhaps a day or so after the incident. As it were, she came to in her bedroom, tucked in snugly under blankets with Kenna asleep on a chair nearby, the fireplace blazing comfortably. She lay still for a moment, a strange heaviness in her limbs, and then slowly sat up, feeling the last traces of strange dreams fade from her memory.
Something was wrong.
Her eyes skimmed the room, wondering what it was, and her uneasiness both lessened and grew when she couldnât identify anything off. The blankets were slowly eased away, and she lightly pattered on to the floor, avoiding making any noise.
Why did she want to avoid making noise?
Janet stopped, puzzled. Sheâd never had a problem with being loud before. Graeme and the rest of the adults had nicknamed her a walking fireplace with how she blazed through the house, hopping about and uttering cheery remarks and filling the place with her warmth. Not that she was loud in a boisterous sort of way, she was too well brought up for that, but this sudden desire to be utterly silent was quite new.
It must be because the Feyâs visit was so frightening, and she didnât want to distress poor Kennaâs nerves. Yes, that must be it. She was worried about Kenna.
This resolved, she glided over to where the windows were and drew the curtains aside to let light spill into the room. It was really too stuffy in here. Not enough air and light. Janet needed air and light; she couldnât go without them.
She stopped again. Really? Were air and light so necessary? Well, however did she manage to go to sleep at night, then? Her father always closed the windows and curtains at night; it was too cold to do otherwise. Thinking about that now, though, made her feel kind of claustrophobic. What about the stars? The moon? The scent of lilies in the breeze?
Her head was aching, so she put a cold hand to it (why was she so cold?), hoping that would ease the pain. The sense of wrongness was strong â so strong. Why was Janet thinking all these things? What on earth had happened to her?
A little shimmer caught her eye, so she turned to look at what it was. That standing mirror wasnât new, with its worn gold filigree and carved legs, and the girl it reflected back at her was familiar tooâŚ
ExceptâŚ
Almost in a daze, she gently flowed forward and studied the person in the mirror. That was her figure, to be sure; small round freckled face, tiny button nose, large green eyes, and a head of thick, curly, brown-red hair. Everything she recognised as herself; everything except the expression on a face that was paler than it used to be.
That expression was familiar, though. She had seen it last on a snowy boy-Fey whose hands sheâd held until they were taken apart.
Many minutes (or perhaps hours) passed as she stood there, stunned by that revelation; everything seemed suspended and still, her mind blank with disbelief. She was so absorbed that Kennaâs cry of surprise startled her to the point that Janet, the old Janet, would have jumped and uttered a cry herself, but she only gracefully tilted to face her nanny, carefully concealing every bit of dread and fear, though she did not know why.
---------
Everything was wrong.
He knew everything would be wrong. However, it was one thing to know and altogether another thing to experience. Wrongness could not be properly understood without feeling it oneself, and Tamlin would have preferred to go his entire life without understanding it.
The grass was uncomfortable under his cheek, and it took most of his willpower to prevent himself from shifting in discomfort. He had to understand before he did anything â a mindset he was thoroughly relieved to find still with him.
Where was he?
Ah. Right.
Still he kept his eyes closed, but strained to listen and feel everything he could from his surroundings. It was all the same- he recognised- and yet-
So new and unknown and terrifying. Off by a little margin. Dampened and hushed.
He was so scared.
Was thatâŚ. water⌠on his face? Why was there water on his face?
This phenomenon puzzled him enough to distract momentarily from the fear, and he sifted through his knowledge, trying to figure out what was going on. A few blurred moments later, two memories surfaced. One that was familiar, and the other that was new.
Crying. So thatâs what it was. He was crying.
How strange. Tamlin had never cried before (or at least, he didnât remember ever crying). This seemed to him to be a rather mellow kind of crying, if those other memories served him right, one where his tears simply slid down his face. There were other kinds: kinds that stole oneâs breath so that it pained one, kinds that were noisy and messy, kinds that came from anger or joy. It was truly fascinating.
Although⌠he hoped he didnât do any of those. Mother wouldâŚ
Heâd rather not think about it.
The grass was pricklier than ever, but he stayed still for about ten minutes more before allowing himself to get up, having confirmed that there was no one in the clearing with him. Opening his eyes for the first time since the ritual was a strange experience, and for a moment he panicked at his blurry vision before realising it was because of the tears. Rubbing his eyes and surveying his surroundings once more revealed that his vision was still not as good as it used to be, but it was better than he had expected.
He was too warm, he noticed. The girl, Janet, had been warm, so he supposed it wasnât surprising, even if it was uncomfortable. Remembering her made a knot form in his chest, whether from guilt or the residual magic he was not sure. Perhaps both.
Magic. His magic.
Panic washed over Tamlin anew when he realised he couldnât feel it anymore. Of course he couldnât. He had expected as much, knew it wouldnât be there. But one of the few things in his entire world that kept him safe had just disappeared, and he was scared. So very very scared.
There was the water, no wait, tears again. He swiped at his eyes again, trying to get it to stop. What would he do? Just what exactly would he do?
Inhale. Exhale. Think.
Something soft and warm bloomed in his heart for a moment before fading almost immediately. It stopped Tamlinâs thoughts altogether. Unlike the rest of the warmth, which still caused him some discomfort, that little spot of light had offered solace while it lasted.
He slowed. Closed his eyes. Breathed for a few minutes.
Inhale.
Exhale.
Inhale.
Exhale.
And there it was again. Soft and warm, but far more present this time. The breathing continued until he was sure it wouldnât disappear again, after which he turned his attention to it and studied it with a smudge of fascination.
Fascination that turned into a painful bit of hope once he recognised what it was.
So Janet had had magic. Was she aware of it? Well, considering how faint it was, probably not. In all likelihood, actually, it had only just awakened. With Tamlin, instead of the little redhead, which made that knot of guilt tighten again, but it was contrasted by his shoulders loosening with relief. If the magic had awakened before this, Mother would never have considered Janet at all.
Tamlin studied this new frail magic, trying to understand what it could do. Human magic was so very different from fey magic (if his own magic had been a good indicator of fey magic, that is): less wild and shifty, and more⌠calm. At home. It remained to be seen whether the relaxed air to him now was caused by the magicâs simple presence or by it, well, casting magic on him.
The peace couldnât last for long, though.
Leaves rustled off the side and Tamlin tensed before turning to face the elegant, sharp Fey before him. Mother had come for her visit.
âFinally awake, are we, dear?â she said, the intonation on âdearâ as mocking as it had always been, her teeth sharpening in her smile. âWell? How do you fare? Happy, I hope?â
Tamlin stood and, for the first time in all his seven years, smiled back at her.
The response surprised him as much as it surprised his mother, sparking a profound relief deep in his heart and a wider smile from the Queen. To think that the friendly little Janet had hid herself behind her cheer, hid herself so well, in fact, that she had fooled even the Queen of the Fey.
Smiling didnât suit Tamlin (this one made his face hurt because of how⌠much it felt to him, someone used to the barest ghosts of expressions), but it could protect him, and he was so very glad.
So he continued smiling, even as he said, âYes, Mother.â Even as it drained his energy, even as the wrongness settled around him like fog in early mornings, he smiled.
Tamlin could protect himself. For just a little longer.
It has been days, no, weeks since he hadnât seen Revenge. Threat was starting to really get upset, not knowing what happened to his friend. But Silva assured him he would find his friend on a mission in this AU where she had the kindness to teleport him in. And she was right, he thought, as he saw the familiar silhouette of his beloved friend. His soul leapt within his rib cage and pounded, he was so relieved his friend was fine and in good shape. But his non-existent stomach knotted quickly as he noticed something was off.
Carefully, he emerged from his hiding place and approached Revenge, and was hurt to see that the latter took a step back upon seeing him and immediately became defensive. What was wrong ? They knew each other for a long time now, they were close friends until now, what happened ? Did Nightmare turn his mind inside out and manipulate him into being suspicious of anyone and anything ? No, this couldnât be, because even if Nightmare tried, Revenge wasnât that easy to manipulate. It had to be something else - but what ?
- Revenge ⌠Revenge, I donât know what he did to you, but you donât have to fear me. I swear that Iâm trustworthy, and I would do anything for you to believe me on this. Iâm being serious.
Revenge frowned, and seemed to be destabilized, disturbed, even. There was a sort of... panic? in his eye sockets. He conjured a bone in his right hand and brandished it threateningly, and this gesture had the effect of a knife in Threat's soul. Why ?? This question was going round and round in his head.
- how⌠how do you know my name ?
What ? What did he mean ? Of course he knew his name, since the time they knew each other ! A bad feeling crept into his mind. He had a hunch that he knew the sinister reason for this behavior. Even if manipulated, Revenge would never have forgotten his name, who Threat was. There was only one possibility, and it froze the magic in Threat's nonexistent veins.
- Revenge, itâs me ! Threat ! C-Câmon, buddy, this isnât funny anymore.
Confusion and a moment of genuine hesitation relaxed Revenge's features for an instant, but it didn't last. He attacked Threat who didn't dare to really defend himself - only doing the minimum to protect himself and Revenge from being hurt - and held him on the ground. Jaw clenched, anger flashing in his pupils, he growled his words softly like a dog about to attack - which froze Threat and gave him shivers of both horror and a certain kind of unknown and unacknowledged fascination at the sound.
- i know no one called such a name. i donât know you. how. do. you. know. my. NAME. my patience is running thin, stranger.
âStrangerâ. It was the final blow to Threat's soul and the terrible realization that the Revenge he had known until then was dead. Literally dead.
Ok so I got random motivation to write one small text. For the context the two characters mentioned below are OCs, they're both dragons. The name of the whole writing project is "Beyond the Horizon".
Eclair tossed and turned in her nest, but she couldn't find any comfortable position. Even tho her nest was objectively comfortable, she couldn't be. No matter how much feathers and fur she would add to it. Her agitation eventually attracted Vipère's attention and the Venenum came closer to her and gave her the benefit of her physical presence, scales against scales. Eclair was grateful of this act, for sure ; but she just couldn't tell Vipère the truth : that no matter how much effort her new-made friend was putting into making her staying here as comfortable as possible, she couldn't help but missing her natal mountains, the wind directly blowing on her side, the reassuring coolness of the rock under her paws and claws, the purity of the air and the smells of mountain plants, and those of ibex ready to be hunted, the sound high altitude winds howling, the thunderous crack of lightning strikes during storms. No matter how hard she tried, no matter how kind and sweet was Vipère, she couldn't help but wonder when she could go back home, even tho how hostile life was there because of the upper castes. But only the Great Mother knew how much Vipère was trying. No, she couldn't just break all her efforts by telling her. It was okay. She was just homesick. Perhaps, it would eventually go away. She closed her eyelids but sleep was slow in coming. ... Perhaps.
Following Hienâs orders to rest, Silva spends a week off her feet and away from her Warrior of Light duties to sort through the troubling emotions in her mind and heart. Some days are easier than others, and the much-needed difficult conversations take their toll on her. But her resolve is absolute.
Âť Link to Chapter 20
More In-Depth Tags may be found inside of the Chapter Notes!
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Characters: Silva Cataracta, Ricmorn Cataracta, and Hien Rijin.
Rating: Teen
Notes: his scene takes place sometime after the main events of Endwalker 6.0, but there are no mentions of anything from MSQ, so there are no spoilers here! Just a cute little fluffy moment đ Words contained in [brackets] are in another language, in this case, it's Doman.
Content Warnings/Additional Tags: Polyamory Relationship (V Relationship), M/F/M Relationship, Non-Sexual Nudity (All three end up naked at some point in this, but nothing graphic/revealing at all), Playful Banter/Teasing, Suggestive Themes, Kissing, Non-Sexual Touching, Tending to Minor Injuries, Cuddling, Domestic Fluff. If I forgot to tag something, I'm so sorry!
Characters: Silva Cataracta, Ricmorn Cataracta, and Hien Rijin. As well as two little ones~
Rating: General
Notes: WHEW this one was a little challenging to write. Mostly because there will be a scene like this in my longfic, but it's going to happen differently, and because I was running out of energy/brain cells writing this out and had a difficult time conveying how I wanted this scene to go đSo it's short, sweet, and to the point! But it's still adorable in its own way. Words contained in [brackets] are in another language, in this case, it's Doman.
Content Warnings/Additional Tags: Polyamory Relationship (V Relationship), M/F/M Relationship, Anxiety, Nervousness, Brief Mentions of Childhood Trauma (so brief, you'll miss it if you blink), Playful Banter/Teasing, Kissing, Pregnancy, Mentions of Contraceptives, Mentions of Difficulty Conceiving, Domestic Fluff. If I forgot to tag something, I'm so sorry!